Is solar green?

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  • J.P.M.
    replied
    Originally posted by lisawurtzbach
    All I know is that since solar power get the energy from the sun, by installing it to our home this helps combat greenhouse gas emissions therefore reduces fossil fuels like natural gas and coal.
    What if you first simply used less energy ?

    You want to really save the planet ?? -- Learn how energy is used. Learn something of the true scope of what you think your talking about. Then, put your newfound knowledge to some serious and meaningful use by putting your efforts where you mouth is and learn how to get by with a lot less energy use instead of simply offsetting profligate use by throwing high tech at what have become wasteful habits while spouting bumper sticker platitudes that are little more than parroted clich
    Last edited by J.P.M.; 03-23-2017, 10:53 PM.

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  • lisawurtzbach
    replied
    All I know is that since solar power get the energy from the sun, by installing it to our home this helps combat greenhouse gas emissions therefore reduces fossil fuels like natural gas and coal.

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  • Mike90250
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian
    .....*Theoretically*, we could swap all cars for EVs overnight, eliminate all pipe exhaust pollution and not need a single extra electron in the process.
    And magic fairies dig holes in the earth to obtain the raw materials for the exotic batteries, with no pollution. How many years does a prius or volt battery last? Many times, the car is just scrapped because of the high cost to replace the battery (owners don't have the same subsidy Mfg's have.) My friend is on his 3rd EV, and just trades them in when the battery fades out. Sure the hybrids get good mileage, but they can't haul a load (12,000 lbs) of gravel like my 20 year old pickup & trailer can. But I won't drive my truck in the city, it's not needed, we take the 6 year old subaru instead.
    Oh, wait, city is 140 miles away, and I have to be home to feed and water the animals tonight. pure EV is not going to make that trip, unless YOU gift me a tesla and a charging station for it. My household 5Kw array is not going to support an EV charger too.

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  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by jflorey2
    Bolt comes pretty close ($36K, 240 mile range.) And the Focus is $30K for 115 miles range.
    Yep. I have my eye on both of those. I want to see how they do after a year or so that would be the time I would be looking to retire our Nissan Altima but the wife has her heart set on a small SUV due to our 1100 foot dirt driveway.

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  • jflorey2
    replied
    Originally posted by SunEagle
    An EV is in my future but I am still waiting on one that has a range closer to > 100 mile/charge with a price tag < $35k. They are coming but not yet, so maybe a hybrid or I wait a little longer.
    Bolt comes pretty close ($36K, 240 mile range.) And the Focus is $30K for 115 miles range.
    Last edited by jflorey2; 03-15-2017, 02:22 PM.

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  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian

    I'm not claiming to be able to solve anything, just addressing the point that I and many others are supposedly just shifting pollution into someone else's backyard to make ourselves feel better or superior... like it's the main motivator and can be summed up with an apples to oranges comparison somehow.

    I didn't even mention solar in that response to stress that even EVs on the simple dirty grid can make a difference (they're *never* worse than gassers as many claim, period) without the additional hoops that some of us jump through to get even "greener".

    We've covered 80K electric miles (mostly solar) in almost 6 years in my LaLa land, ran thousands of AC hours on solar, exported thousands of kWhs back to the grid and I didn't shift s#it to anyone in the process. I consumed much less (though paid a lot more but for a good cause )

    (stop/start, yes, I took an equivalent tech thought shortcut when traction power is running when idling and not heating up the place.)
    I believe you are trying to both reduce your electric usage and fossil fuel burning which hopefully makes you happy.

    I too have a home that is totally electric (except for my water heater which is solar thermal heated). I do not have any solar pv panels yet because the cost to install is still high (>$3/watt) with little to no rebates except the FED and an average yearly consumption of 15,000 kWh (down from 25,000 kWh a few years ago) at a cost of $0.11/kWh which makes it hard to get a short time payback even at $3/watt. I plan on building a new home this year around 1600 sq ft which is about 600 sq ft smaller than what I have and will be much better insulated so I expect my electric bill to go down even more.

    An EV is in my future but I am still waiting on one that has a range closer to > 100 mile/charge with a price tag < $35k. They are coming but not yet, so maybe a hybrid or I wait a little longer.

    The big issue is with our POCO's here in Florida. It isn't until recently that they (or at least one FP&L) has started to build some very large PV systems 8 @ 75MW each so most generation is either natural gas, coal or nuclear (which the last is just fine with me). So most of my power will not come from RE which means my EV and home electric will probably be from fossil fuel until I can install a pv system myself but again that will only provide me during the 5 to 6 hours during the day.

    My idea is to keep reducing my electric footprint and use more RE where possible but with 40+ years in the electrical power industry and solar cell technology I understand what it takes to keep the lights on 24/7/365. RE can't do it yet and won't for decades to come without a major shift in culture as to how people use electricity. I hope you understand that I am not against solar or RE as a power source but realistically it won't keep the lights on for me or most people in the world.

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  • bcroe
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian
    It's not sad - it's a first significant step in reducing the demand and not needing to build
    any more coal plants in my hood (on top of gaining efficiencies elsewhere like appliances, HVAC and lighting)

    Idle loads during peak summer demand are taken care of and AC cooling is largely powered by the sun in my household.
    I've also reduced demand for natural gas as I often switch to electric heating on cooler (but sunny) days.
    Those are big steps and with battery revolution taking place, we'll be moving even faster!
    100% of the heating and cooling is sun powered at this house, and my electric power too.

    We have been working on battery technology for a couple centuries, but haven't made
    enough progress to retire the old standbys. Or propel a car 1K miles a day (routine here).

    So many people have jumped to the conclusion, that just because our information handling ability is vastly increased (by the
    development of the integrated circuit), we can somehow change all the rules of the physical sciences. Don't hold your breath.
    Bruce Roe

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  • jflorey2
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian
    I didn't even mention solar in that response to stress that even EVs on the simple dirty grid can make a difference (they're *never* worse than gassers as many claim, period) without the additional hoops that some of us jump through to get even "greener".
    Depends where you are and what vehicles you are comparing.

    In Seattle, where most power comes from hydro, an EV is a lot cleaner than a Suburban.
    In West Virginia, where most power comes from coal, a Prius Prime (operating in gas mode) is a lot cleaner than an EV.

    I agree that in MOST places you can compare an EV to an average car and it's cleaner overall. But that's not true everywhere.

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  • cracovian
    replied
    Originally posted by jflorey2
    Yes, in theory. In reality utilities would have to burn more gas and coal to charge all those EV's.
    So in theory you could add a lot more solar and charge during the day. But in reality the grid couldn't handle that additional daytime load.
    So in theory you could upgrade the grid to support that.

    In reality, all of that takes a lot of money, time and nonrenewable resources. So, as always, it's a tradeoff.

    Solar (and EV's) can be _part_ of a reduced pollution economy. But throwing lots of solar at the problem doesn't solve it; it just changes the problem.

    (BTW your LEAF doesn't "come with start-stop tech" - that's only applicable to internal combustion engines that idle.)
    I'm not claiming to be able to solve anything, just addressing the point that I and many others are supposedly just shifting pollution into someone else's backyard to make ourselves feel better or superior... like it's the main motivator and can be summed up with an apples to oranges comparison somehow.

    I didn't even mention solar in that response to stress that even EVs on the simple dirty grid can make a difference (they're *never* worse than gassers as many claim, period) without the additional hoops that some of us jump through to get even "greener".

    We've covered 80K electric miles (mostly solar) in almost 6 years in my LaLa land, ran thousands of AC hours on solar, exported thousands of kWhs back to the grid and I didn't shift s#it to anyone in the process. I consumed much less (though paid a lot more but for a good cause )

    (stop/start, yes, I took an equivalent tech thought shortcut when traction power is running when idling and not heating up the place.)
    Last edited by cracovian; 03-15-2017, 01:28 PM.

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  • SunEagle
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian

    I'm really disappointed (and shocked) with your statement that only non-knowledgeable people (or rich Kochs) make. Are you sure you thought this through? How is pollution shifted exactly? Each gallon of gas that our 24 MPG average gasser burns needs the minimum of 6 kWh to refine (already polluting my place) before it gets to your tank and then exhausted in front of my school while waiting to pick up the kids or zooming on the way to work. My LEAF (2-year olds for $6K now) covers exactly 24 miles on that energy alone and comes with stop/start tech, energy regen, and superior ride for less than a Corolla.

    *Theoretically*, we could swap all cars for EVs overnight, eliminate all pipe exhaust pollution and not need a single extra electron in the process.


    I think you are living in a nice little cozy dream world and really do not understand how electricity is generated, transmitted and consumed world wide.

    EV's will not solve the problem of pollution and will not eliminate fossil fuel from this planet. RE power may reduce fossil fuel usage but even with new battery technology until people greatly reduce their usage (including how they charge their EV's) we will continue to need a lot of power generation from many different fuel sources.

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  • jflorey2
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian
    *Theoretically*, we could swap all cars for EVs overnight, eliminate all pipe exhaust pollution and not need a single extra electron in the process.
    Yes, in theory. In reality utilities would have to burn more gas and coal to charge all those EV's.
    So in theory you could add a lot more solar and charge during the day. But in reality the grid couldn't handle that additional daytime load.
    So in theory you could upgrade the grid to support that.

    In reality, all of that takes a lot of money, time and nonrenewable resources. So, as always, it's a tradeoff.

    Solar (and EV's) can be _part_ of a reduced pollution economy. But throwing lots of solar at the problem doesn't solve it; it just changes the problem.

    (BTW your LEAF doesn't "come with start-stop tech" - that's only applicable to internal combustion engines that idle.)

    Leave a comment:


  • J.P.M.
    replied
    Originally posted by cracovian

    I'm really disappointed (and shocked) with your statement that only non-knowledgeable people (or rich Kochs) make. Are you sure you thought this through? How is pollution shifted exactly? Each gallon of gas that our 24 MPG average gasser burns needs the minimum of 6 kWh to refine (already polluting my place) before it gets to your tank and then exhausted in front of my school while waiting to pick up the kids or zooming on the way to work. My LEAF (2-year olds for $6K now) covers exactly 24 miles on that energy alone and comes with stop/start tech, energy regen, and superior ride for less than a Corolla.

    *Theoretically*, we could swap all cars for EVs overnight, eliminate all pipe exhaust pollution and not need a single extra electron in the process.


    I'm disappointed but not the least shocked by your statement since beliefs of the type you seem to be espousing are, IMO only, usually held by non-knowledgeable people.

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  • cracovian
    replied
    Originally posted by Mike90250
    Oxford comes pretty close. It's like EV's are "green". They just shift the pollution into somebody elses backyard, and then folks in Santa Monica and San Francisco can feel self righteous because they are green and the peons are not...
    I'm really disappointed (and shocked) with your statement that only non-knowledgeable people (or rich Kochs) make. Are you sure you thought this through? How is pollution shifted exactly? Each gallon of gas that our 24 MPG average gasser burns needs the minimum of 6 kWh to refine (already polluting my place) before it gets to your tank and then exhausted in front of my school while waiting to pick up the kids or zooming on the way to work. My LEAF (2-year olds for $6K now) covers exactly 24 miles on that energy alone and comes with stop/start tech, energy regen, and superior ride for less than a Corolla.

    *Theoretically*, we could swap all cars for EVs overnight, eliminate all pipe exhaust pollution and not need a single extra electron in the process.



    Leave a comment:


  • cracovian
    replied
    It's not sad - it's a first significant step in reducing the demand and not needing to build any more coal plants in my hood (on top of gaining efficiencies elsewhere like appliances, HVAC and lighting)

    Idle loads during peak summer demand are taken care of and AC cooling is largely powered by the sun in my household. I've also reduced demand for natural gas as I often switch to electric heating on cooler (but sunny) days.

    Those are big steps and with battery revolution taking place, we'll be moving even faster!

    Leave a comment:


  • SunEagle
    replied
    The sad part is that until someone can find a way to get them solar panels to generate 24/7/365 the power will come from places that are not "green" for a good % of that time unless people become accustomed to being in the dark.

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